Edvard Munch: Why He Would Still Paint Today
Edvard Munch: Psychological Portrait
A CBT Analysis of a Tormented Expressionist Painter
Edvard Munch (1863-1944), the Norwegian painter behind the iconic "The Scream," embodies one of the most troubled figures in art history. Beyond his gripping canvases lies a fragmented psyche: that of a man haunted by existential anxiety, early trauma, and an relentless quest to transform suffering into creation. His work becomes a direct reflection of his psychological structure, making him a particularly rich case for CBT analysis.
Young's Schemas: The Foundations of Torment
Munch's profile is organized around three particularly formative maladaptive early schemas.
The Abandonment/Instability Schema forms the bedrock of his psychology. Munch lost his mother Sophie at age 14 (1877), and his older sister Sophie to tuberculosis also in 1877. These repeated losses carved into him a deep conviction: people you love disappear. In his personal journals, he wrote: "Disease, madness and death were the black angels that watched over my cradle." This statement reveals a child predisposed to fear of abandonment, turning every relationship into a source of anguish. His successive romantic relationships—particularly with Tulla Larsen, from whom he tried to separate in 1902 in a dramatic scene involving a weapon—reflect this compulsion to recreate the schema: intense closeness followed by sudden rupture. The Mistrust/Abuse Schema developed under a tyrannical father. Jonas Munch was a rigid military officer, often psychologically violent. Edvard learned that the world was dangerous, that authority figures could wound without warning. This fundamental mistrust appears in his progressive isolation and growing social withdrawal. He often paints alone, avoids public galleries, and develops a paranoia mixed with conviction that only his intimate work can reveal the truth. The Defectiveness/Shame Schema completes the picture. Munch constantly devalued himself despite his recognized genius. His repeated attempts to remain faithful to his father's realistic style (who disapproved of expressionism) reveal a never-satisfied quest for paternal validation. This internalized shame manifests in his work: vulnerable nudes, self-portraits where he paints himself sick or terrified, compositions where the human subject is fragmented, dissolved, almost transparent.Big Five Profile: A Hyper-Conscientious Artist Eaten Away by Neuroticism
Openness to Experience (very high): Munch opens himself massively to artistic, poetic, and emotional experience. His stays in Berlin, Paris, and Lübeck allow him to absorb symbolist and impressionist influences and transform them into something radically new. He constantly seeks to explore the psychological invisible. Conscientiousness (moderate-high): Paradoxically, despite his reputation as an impulsive genius, Munch works methodically. He prepares his compositions with multiple sketches, obsessively returns to his motifs ("The Scream" exists in four different versions). This rigor also expresses anxious control: he must master internal chaos through formal mastery. Extraversion (very low): Munch is profoundly introverted. Salons terrify him. After his psychotic crisis in 1908 (hospitalization at the Copenhagen psychiatric hospital in Denmark), he reinforces his isolation. Solitude becomes his refuge and his Norwegian studio Ekely, his psychological bunker. Agreeableness (low): Little sentiment toward others, even verbally aggressive. His romantic relationships are tumultuous. He conceives of love as combat, destructive fusion. His representations of women oscillate between fascination and hostility—they are simultaneously muses and predators. Neuroticism (extremely high): This is the dominant trait. Munch lives in a state of permanent emotional hypervigilance. Anxiety, depression, and obsessive thoughts structure his daily life. He declared: "I don't paint what I see, but what I feel." This feeling is visceral, often painful.Attachment Style: Anxious-Ambivalent Attachment
Munch displays classic characteristics of anxious attachment. He intensely seeks proximity (passionate relationships), fears abandonment, and oscillates between idealization and devaluation of partners. With Tulla Larsen, he experienced a destructive 8-year obsession, unable to either stay in the relationship or definitively leave it.
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Prendre RDV en visioséanceThis anxious attachment transfers to his art: his figures are often intertwined, suffocating against each other. "The Kiss" (1897) shows two silhouettes whose individual contours can no longer be distinguished—fusion and loss of self characteristic of the pattern. His relationship to creation is also anxious attachment: he cannot let his works go. He hoards them, constantly returns to his compositions, like a child who cannot release the maternal object.
Defense Mechanisms: Projection and Sublimation
Projection: Munch projects his internal states onto the perceived world. He sees nature as threatening (dark forests, blood-red sky), the body as a site of disintegration. These visions reflect his internal emotional landscape transposed outward. Sublimation: This is the major adaptive mechanism. Munch transforms his overflowing anxiety, his pre-oedipal rage, his shame into artistic creation. Each canvas is a ritualization, a crystallization of trauma. Painting becomes his psychotherapy before its time. Intellectualization: His journals reveal an intense thinker who attempts to rationalize his emotions, transform them into personal philosophy, into "existential scream." This is a defense against emotional overwhelm.CBT Perspectives: Toward Reformulation
From a CBT perspective, Munch would have benefited from cognitive therapy addressing:
- Restructuring core beliefs around abandonment and relational danger.
- Gradual exposure to relational commitment without reproducing the traumatic schema.
- Identifying automatic thoughts: "If I attach, they will leave me" → examining contrary evidence.
- Emotional mindfulness rather than projection: observing suffering without projecting it onto the world.
Conclusion: The Lesson of The Scream
Edvard Munch reminds us of a profound CBT truth: our early schemas, our problematic attachments, and our temperamental traits are never a foregone conclusion. They can be transformed. Munch did not heal himself, but he transformed his suffering into a universal cry—that of the modern soul confronting its existential emptiness. "The Scream" is not an expression of his pathology; it is the controlled sublimation of a primordial wound into a cultural icon.
For us, the lesson remains: awareness of our schemas, even when tormented, is the first step toward their integration.
See Also
To Go Further: My book Understanding Your Attachment deepens the themes addressed in this article with practical exercises and concrete tools. Discover on Amazon | Read a free excerpt
Recommended Reading:
- Reinventing Your Life — Jeffrey Young
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